Sunday, September 6, 2009

Working Docs

I don't know whether this is one of those Monday morning flukes, but Google docs seems to be accessible at my workplace. I haven't been able to get there for about 18 months, despite complaints and requests to have it unblocked.

Mind you, I did get a "blocked" page when I went to sign in. But then I was able just to go to my documents and everything was okay. Perhaps it has actually been like this all along -- in other words, the block was completely lame and limited to one part of the google docs domain. Taking Occam's razor into account, I suspect this is the case.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Response to the Shirky thing

While many of the social networkers have picked up on the Shirky thing as "oh yeah, he said it, that's so right!", I wonder if for some this is not because it justifies their time on teh internets? (I spend too much time in that place too, but don't try to justify it!)

Mark Bernstein has raised some issues about historical accuracy in Shirky's talk, but does admit that the conclusions have merit.

I wonder, however, about the overall merits of the talk. For me, there are not just possible historical flaws, there are logical ones also. For example, if Desparate Housewives was a cognitive heatsink, what is wrong with that, and why should television watching be downgraded as a second-rate, passive activity? Watching television is, in fact, a social activity. People talk about shows the next day, and they do so on the basis of shared experience. Talk and shared experience are the building blocks of a culture and a society. And if society needed, and got, a heatsink, that seems like a good thing to me.

Shirky's conclusions are attractive, but they are based on a flawed argument and should be examined more closely. Their real value is as a discussion starter, and it would be a shame if people accepted them too quickly without having a much more valuable discussion.

What's all this then?

This is not really a blog -- it's a place where I sometimes put rough drafts and ideas that I may eventually finish and post to another blog.

Of course, there are lots of good tools for doing this, but I chose blogger itself for three reasons:

  1. It's pretty universally available (whereas, eg, Google docs is blocked at my workplace), and all the offline blogging tools work with blogger
  2. My drafts look like blog posts, so I get a better idea of how they might work on a blog -- context is everything
  3. If by some highly unlikely chance somebody actually finds this site and reads something, and then, if in the even less-likely event they take the time to comment on something, I get feedback on my writing while it is still happening -- blogs are public, why shouldn't the drafts be?
So, if you come by here, and something catches your eye, please by all means feel free to comment. But please, please, don't take anything seriously.